138 research outputs found
Effect of defects on thermal denaturation of DNA Oligomers
The effect of defects on the melting profile of short heterogeneous DNA
chains are calculated using the Peyrard-Bishop Hamiltonian. The on-site
potential on a defect site is represented by a potential which has only the
short-range repulsion and the flat part without well of the Morse potential.
The stacking energy between the two neigbouring pairs involving a defect site
is also modified. The results are found to be in good agreement with the
experiments.Comment: 11 pages including 5 postscript figure; To be appear in Phys. Rev.
DNA hybridization to mismatched templates: a chip study
High-density oligonucleotide arrays are among the most rapidly expanding
technologies in biology today. In the {\sl GeneChip} system, the reconstruction
of the target concentration depends upon the differential signal generated from
hybridizing the target RNA to two nearly identical templates: a perfect match
(PM) and a single mismatch (MM) probe. It has been observed that a large
fraction of MM probes repeatably bind targets better than the PMs, against the
usual expectation from sequence-specific hybridization; this is difficult to
interpret in terms of the underlying physics. We examine this problem via a
statistical analysis of a large set of microarray experiments. We classify the
probes according to their signal to noise () ratio, defined as the
eccentricity of a (PM, MM) pair's `trajectory' across many experiments. Of
those probes having large () only a fraction behave consistently with
the commonly assumed hybridization model. Our results imply that the physics of
DNA hybridization in microarrays is more complex than expected, and they
suggest new ways of constructing estimators for the target RNA concentration.Comment: 3 figures 1 tabl
Pd/Au based catalyst immobilization in polymeric nanofibrous membranes via electrospinning for the selective oxidation of 5-hydroxymethylfurfural
Innovative nanofibrous membranes based on Pd/Au catalysts immobilized via electrospinning onto different polymers were engineered and tested in the selective oxidation of 5- (hydroxymethyl)furfural in an aqueous phase. The type of polymer and the method used to insert the active phases in the membrane were demonstrated to have a significant effect on catalytic performance. The hydrophilicity and the glass transition temperature of the polymeric component are key factors for producing active and selective materials. Nylon-based membranes loaded with unsupported metal nanoparticles were demonstrated to be more efficient than polyacrylonitrilebased membranes, displaying good stability and leading to high yield in 2,5-furandicarboxylic acid. These results underline the promising potential of large-scale applications of electrospinning for the preparation of catalytic nanofibrous membranes to be used in processes for the conversion of renewable molecules
Solving the riddle of the bright mismatches: hybridization in oligonucleotide arrays
HDONA technology is predicated on two ideas. First, the differential between
high-affinity (perfect match, PM) and lower-affinity (mismatch, MM) probes is
used to minimize cross-hybridization. Second, several short probes along the
transcript are combined, introducing redundancy. Both ideas have shown problems
in practice: MMs are often brighter than PMs, and it is hard to combine the
pairs because their brightness often spans decades. Previous analysis suggested
these problems were sequence-related; publication of the probe sequences has
permitted us an in-depth study of this issue. Our results suggest that
fluorescently labeling the nucleotides interferes with mRNA binding, causing a
catch-22 since, to be detected, the target mRNA must both glow and stick to its
probe: without labels it cannot be seen even if bound, while with too many it
won't bind. We show that this conflict causes much of the complexity of HDONA
raw data, suggesting that an accurate physical understanding of hybridization
by incorporating sequence information is necessary to perfect microarray
analysis.Comment: 4 figure
Effects of isopropanol on collagen fibrils in new parchment
Background: Isopropanol is widely used by conservators to relax the creases and folds of parchment artefacts. At present, little is known of the possible side effects of the chemical on parchments main structural component- collagen. This study uses X-ray Diffraction to investigate the effects of a range of isopropanol concentrations on the dimensions of the nanostructure of the collagen component of new parchment. Results: It is found in this study that the packing features of the collagen molecules within the collagen fibril are altered by exposure to isopropanol. The results suggest that this chemical treatment can induce a loss of structural water from the collagen within parchment and thus a rearrangement of intermolecular bonding. This study also finds that the effects of isopropanol treatment are permanent to parchment artefacts and cannot be reversed with rehydration using deionised water. Conclusions: This study has shown that isopropanol induces permanent changes to the packing features of collagen within parchment artefacts and has provided scientific evidence that its use to remove creases and folds on parchment artefacts will cause structural change that may contribute to long-term deterioration of parchment artefacts. This work provides valuable information that informs conservation practitioners regarding the use of isopropanol on parchment artefacts
H2 production by methane steam reforming over Rh/Al2O3 catalyst packed in Cu foams: A strategy for the kinetic investigation in concentrated conditions
The concept of Rh/Al2O3 catalyst pellets packed in highly conductive copper foams has been successfully tested in methane steam reforming showing the beneficial effects of thermal conductivity on the obtainment of gradient-less radial temperature profiles. In this work, the same concept is proposed as a strategy for the lab-scale kinetic investigation under concentrated conditions at ambient pressure; thanks to the homogeneous heating of the catalyst mass across the reactor section and the measurement of axial temperature profiles, well-controlled temperature conditions are obtained, and the experimental investigation can be extended to usually unfeasible conditions of high reactant concentrations, overcoming the typical challenges for the kinetic study. Here, steam reforming experiments were performed with CH4 and H2O feed molar fractions in the ranges of 10â20 % and 40â90 %, respectively. The co-feed of CO and H2 was also investigated. A kinetic scheme was developed that substantially confirmed the main results of previous kinetic investigations in annular micro-reactor, performed under diluted conditions; in particular, the first order dependence of the rate of steam reforming on methane partial pressure, the independence from H2O partial pressure, and the important inhibiting effect of CO were confirmed. The independence of the reaction rate from the H2 co-feed was here demonstrated for the first time. The new experimental campaign allowed to identify more clearly the kinetic dependencies of the water gas shift reaction, positively influenced by H2O partial pressure but scarcely affected by CO partial pressure, which could be also explained based on the inhibiting effect of surface CO coverage. Parameter estimates were obtained by model fit over a wide temperature range (400â850 °C), conveying robustness to the proposed kinetic scheme for future reactor design applications
Dielectric Behavior of Lysozyme and Ferricytochrome-c in Water/Ethylene-Glycol Solutions
This work deals with a dielectric study at radio frequencies of the influence at room temperature of two organic molecules, known as cryo-protectants, ethylene-glycol and glycerol, on conformational and dynamic properties of two model proteins, lysozyme (lys) from chicken egg-white and ferricytochrome-c (cyt-c) from horse heart. Cyt-c is a compact globular protein whereas lys is composed of two structural domains, separated by the active site cleft. Measurements were carried out at the fixed temperature of 20°C varying the concentration of the cosolvent up to 90% w/w. From the analysis of the dielectric relaxation of the protein solution, the effective hydrodynamic radius and the electric dipole moment of the protein were calculated as a function of the cosolvent concentration. The data show that glycerol does not modify significantly the conformation of both proteins and cyt-c is also stable in the presence of ethylene-glycol. On the contrary ethylene-glycol strongly affects the dielectric response of lysozyme denoting a specific effect on its conformation and dynamics. The data are coherently interpreted hypothesizing that glycol molecule wedges between and separates the two domains of lys making them rotationally independent
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